In Spokane, our community has been hit hard by the pandemic's impacts due to our business demographics and population.
According to the Washington state Employment Security Department, our economic engine in the Inland Northwest is a community of
When Innovia Foundation CEO Shelly O'Quinn moved all office operations from an antiquated database server to a cloud-based system, she had no idea how big of a deal the decision ultimately would be.
Planned giving is expected to increase in the coming years, and Spokane-area nonprofits are ramping up efforts to draw in long-term donors.
The U.S. is barreling toward the largest wealth transfer in history, with baby boomers expected to transfer
There might not be enough advisers to handle the 'great wealth transfer†anticipated to occur as baby boomers pass away and leave assets to their heirs, some in the Spokane-area financial planning industry say.
A procedure pioneered in Spokane by medical teams led by cardiologist Dr. Francis Everhart and cardiac surgeon Dr. Ralph Berg in 1971 changed the standard of care for people having a heart attack and has led to further advances in emergency
A cardiologist at MultiCare Health System's Pulse Heart Institute, in Spokane, says a new combination of existing technologies allows patients and doctors to monitor cardiac activity in real time.
Dr. David Cleary says Bluetooth-enabled implantable
A Spokane Valley-based startup founded by two Washington State University professors is looking to develop an in-home testing kit for heart failure and blood platelet contaminations.
Walmart is getting into the business of financial advice?
I immediately thought, well, they are no longer as prevalent now that Amazon has taken so much of their market share, and they are trying to stay profitable to the market changes.
COVID-19 vaccines are being administered throughout retirement communities here, and administrators say the process is going smoothly.
According to U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention data, more than 63,000 doses of the vaccine had been
Following a sharp decrease in demand as the pandemic swept through Washington state in March, in-home care companies now are starting to see an uptick in demand for their services, as isolation and exhaustion lead more seniors to seek outside care